About Randi
Randi Levine is admitted to the bars of Connecticut and Massachusetts and is authorized to appear before the U.S. Courts of Appeals for the 1st and 2nd Circuits. Her courtroom credentials span state and federal venues in New England, giving her access to a wide range of civil matters and appellate dockets. Those admissions shape the practical reach of her practice and the kinds of matters she can pursue on behalf of clients.
Levine’s professional path has included work in both state and federal forums. She has built a practice that routinely engages with procedural and substantive issues that arise in litigation and appeals. That experience places her at the intersection of trial-level disputes and appellate review, where questions of law gain renewed importance and strategy shifts from fact development to legal argument.
Her work in federal appellate courts reflects familiarity with the mechanics of appellate advocacy. Appearing before the 1st and 2nd Circuits requires attention to briefing, record development, and oral argument. Levine’s admissions to those courts mean she can take cases beyond state lines when federal questions or multi-jurisdictional disputes are involved. In state court, her practice extends to matters that remain within Connecticut and Massachusetts judicial systems.
Colleagues describe the practical demands of appellate work as exacting. In that setting, written submissions matter as much as spoken argument. Levine’s practice navigates those demands by concentrating on clear legal reasoning, careful preservation of issues at the trial level, and concise presentation on appeal. Those elements are central to pursuing reversal, affirmance, or remand depending on a client’s position.
Outside the courtroom, the day-to-day business of running cases involves preparing records, coordinating with litigation teams, and managing deadlines across jurisdictions. Levine’s cross-jurisdictional admissions require administrative attention to filings and procedural rules that differ between state and federal systems. That attention helps ensure appeals are properly presented and state-court matters progress on schedule.
She maintains an active practice in Connecticut and Massachusetts and appears in federal appellate panels when cases warrant elevated review. Her current practice concentrates on handling state and federal litigation and appellate matters.